And, of course, this is my blog, for deeper reflections. Like this. I believe that if you find someone interesting, and follow both their blogs and their tweets, you can see what they’re tracking and then their reflections, and use them as a mentor. A stealth mentor, as I like to call it ;). Let’s do this by platform.

You can blog your thoughts, microblog what you’re looking at, make your interim representations available as collaborative documents, there are many ways to make your work transparent. This blog, Learnlets, is just for that purpose of thinking out loud: so I can get feedback and input or others can benefit. You could be wrong.

A few months back, the esteemed Dr. Will Thalheimer encouraged me to join him in a blog dialog, and we posted the first one on who L&D had responsibility to. What is the root cause of our suffering? I’ll suggest it’s not massive consumption of heinous chemicals, but instead think that we might want to look to our tools and methods.

recognize that I talk a lot in concepts, e.g. these blog posts and diagrams, but there’s a principled reason: I’m trying to give you a flexible basis, models, to apply to your own situation. It was only at the top level where you used the basic principles of business to run your organization. That was then, this is now.

WordPress: the other way I write out loud is on my blog (like this), and my blog is powered by WordPress. Jane Hart compiles, every year, a list of the top 10 tools for learning. And, of course, it’s that time again, so here we go. In no particular order: 1. Word: I write most of my articles and books in Word. Share. 3. Sense. 4.
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Having requirements for personal reflections via a blog, discussions via forums, and collaborative assignments via wikis, and more, to facilitate learning are all good things, but certainly from the view of the performer it is not informal. Each of these sees the world differently, and we need to separate these out. They have a role to play.
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communing on blog posts, participating in a discussion forum, etc). In a tech-mediated environment, you could see others’ (anonymized) paths, access your feedback, and see traces of other’s trajectories. On the way to the recent Up To All Of Us un conference (#utaou), I hadn’t planned an agenda. This unpacks.
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Of course, you can snap pictures or films for later recollection and reflection, and contribute them to a blog post for reflection. A conversation with a colleague prompted a reflection. The topic was personal learning, and in looking for my intersections (beyond my love of meta-learning ), I looked at my books. Is there more?
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Look at my list of blog posts, and you’ll see that these were my four most recent posts. A few days ago, my colleague Jay Cross wrote a post on plagiarism , dealing with the fact that some of his work (even an example of some of our collaborative work) was being used without attribution. that my stuff is appearing without attribution.
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